Sentences with phrase «cite passages»

We've added real page numbers that correspond to print editions so you can easily reference and cite passages.
«Our customers have told us they want real page numbers that match the page numbers in print books so they can easily reference and cite passages, and read alongside others in a book club or class,» says Amazon.
Easily reference and cite passages or read alongside others in a book club or class.
I am not sure how those that cite passages as the absolute supreme law can overlook those that would require us to kill most citizens of our country?
Could you cite the passages where Jesus tells us to not trust the government?
Those who hold that Mohammed had already arranged the chapters essentially as they now exist cite passages from the Traditions to support their claims.
Moreover, during the century after Eusebius there are five church fathers, including Augustine, who certainly had many occasions to find it useful and who cite passages from Josephus but not this one.»
When Christianity is under fire, and someone is making a poor example of it, why don't real Christians simply cite passages direct from the bible that will plainly paint the offensive force in question as hypocritical?
Jay, I noticed that you did not cite any passages of the Bible, nor did you interact with the passages that I cited.
Has anyone cited this passage in briefs challenging the contraceptive / abortifacient mandate?
In a recent essay, Nathan Roberts cites a passage by Michael Chabon that reminds us of more capacious senses of the word entertainment:
He cites passages from this letter:
The series will be similar to our Mutuality Week from 2012, but will focus specifically on those frequently - cited passages of Scripture that instruct wives to submit to their husbands, slaves to submit to their masters, children to submit to their parents, and Christians to submit to one another (Ephesians 5:21 - 6:9, Colossians 3:12 - 4:6; 1 Peter 2:11 - 3:22).
This is the second post in a weeklong series entitled «Submit One To Another: Christ and the Household Codes,» which will focus on those frequently - cited passages of Scripture that instruct wives to submit to their husbands, slaves to obey their masters, children to obey their parents, and Christians to submit to one another (Ephesians 5:21 - 6:9, Colossians 3:12 - 4:6; 1 Peter 2:11 - 3:22).
I cite this passage in order to show that the encyclical Populorum progressio is not so very novel!)
Citing passages for and against predestination from Shakespeare, Craig Stephans seems to agree on the difficulty of easy assessment and on the inherent uncertainty.
Do you REALLY want people to reply by citing passages of the Bible that you would have to agree reflect poorly on Christianity?
There is no mention of the passage by earlier Christian writers who were familiar with the writings of Josephus and cited his passages yet never reference one that, if it had existed in their time, they would have referenced as support for Christianity.
Celsus had cited this passage in his argument against the Christians.
Defending Balthasar against Scanlon, he cited the passages from the Pope's Crossing the Threshold of Hope mentioned above and referred also to his own book, Death on a Friday Afternoon, in which he had argued from several New Testament texts that although we can not be certain, we may indeed hope and pray for the salvation of all.
In their haste to cite this passage as evidence of God - given patriarchal marriage arrangements, interpreters often miss the subject of the passage.
And Ford cites a passage in which Hartshorne calls God's selection of the laws of nature which characterize the universe «a «lure,» an irresistable datum, for all ordinary acts of synthesis» (TPP 77, citing WEP 21).12
This is the third post in a weeklong series entitled «Submit One To Another: Christ and the Household Codes,» which will focus on those frequently - cited passages of Scripture that instruct wives to submit to their husbands, slaves to obey their masters, children to obey their parents, and Christians to submit to one another (Ephesians 5:21 - 6:9, Colossians 3:12 - 4:6; 1 Peter 2:11 - 3:22).
This is the fourth post in a weeklong series entitled «Submit One To Another: Christ and the Household Codes,» which will focus on those frequently - cited passages of Scripture that instruct wives to submit to their husbands, slaves to obey their masters, children to obey their parents, and Christians to submit to one another (Ephesians 5:21 - 6:9, Colossians 3:12 - 4:6; 1 Peter 2:11 - 3:22).
Explicitly citing the passage from the Summa that I have quoted, the Pope affirms the proposition that «public authority can sometimes choose not to put a stop to something which - were it prohibited - would cause more serious harm.»
Thus, Lepard writes (citing a passage from the Bhagavad Gita) that Hinduism may view the caste system as legitimate, but it also teaches «that such relationships and related social duties are ethically subordinate to a concern for all people.»
A GES blogger on another forum indicated that it is insufficient to cite this passage as proof the message of the cross involves Christ's death.
With respect to the oft - cited passage of Romans 1:26 f. we must notice that Paul's mention of anal intercourse between males functions as an illustration of the consequence of God's having abandoned the gentiles to their own wickedness.
He cited the passage of the Women's Health and Wellness Act in his first year in the Senate, keeping rural hospitals open, and the law permitting game on non-Indian land among his proudest accomplishments.
But a City Hall spokesman insisted that authority remained with the comptroller's office, citing a passage within the executive order: «this Order shall not be construed to infringe upon the Comptroller's responsibility for monitoring compliance with, and conducting investigations under, the Fair Wages for New Yorkers Act.»
She cited passage of a $ 15 hourly minimum wage, the legalization of gay marriage, and enactment of the SAFE Act gun control law.
Seidel cites a passage from Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave in which Douglass recalls the impact of hearing fellow slaves singing in the middle of the night.
Senator Jim Inhofe (R - OK) has taken to the floor of The World's Greatest Deliberative Body and cited a passage from Genesis (8:22) to argue that only God can alter the climate.
This all reminds me of the way Chomsky backs up his facts by citing passages he had written in other books previously.
The review by Doug, which cites passage from the Nature Geoscience, is quite interesting, as a lot of uncertainty about the effects are discussed, including attributing 65 % of the warming to other factors than CO2.
So I will cite the passage that I believe apropos beyond mere exegetics.
But it turns out that McKitrick himself has it completely wrong, as he cites a passage concerning regional warming over the 21st century, instead of the actual relevant passage concerning the period 1975 - 2005.
The lower court judge cited a passage from a prior decision that noted that «The law does not ignore the dilemma of the employer.»
Lederman cites this passage written by Alito:
A commonly cited passage in the Bible is a great place for women who want to know what this means: Proverbs 31:10 - 31 (see excerpts below).
The Appellate court summed up its discussion by citing a passage from the previously - mentioned Bonde decision: «Apparently this is one of those rows between neighbors in which the defendants are standing on what they erroneously believe to be their strict legal rights to the exclusion of any consideration of the fair, decent, neighborly and legal thing to do.»

Not exact matches

If you can cite specific passages in the proposal or give personal experiences you've had that relate to net neutrality, even better.
I suppose it would be important to read the entire book of Galatians so that we can see where Paul is going with the specific passage you cited.
Love is the answer in any situation and upon that we can agree even if we disagree on the causality, genetics, and fancy theological words and scripture passages we can cite back and forth.
I find it funny that the Christian position, when met with any logical argument to discount the greatness of the Bible, can only cite more passages from the same book, as opposed to countering with a equally logical counter position.
to quote (a passage, book, author, etc.), especially as an authority: He cited the const itution in his defense.
She cited as «highly instructive and almost prescriptive» a passage from the Casey decision:
His accent, rather, was on the «Christification» of all things along the lines suggested by the passage from Colossians cited above.
Opponents of gay marriage, Brinton notes, follow a literal approach to the Bible when they cite Old Testament passages that declare, «You shall not lie with a male as with a woman; it is an abomination» (Leviticus 18:22).
In this work he commented one by one on all his writings, giving details about the date and circumstances of the work, noting places where he had changed his mind, pointing out passages where he got things wrong, for example where he had cited a biblical text from memory and not gotten it correct.
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